For Inktober this year I decided to draw 31 black and white cartoons about whatever happened to me on each day of the month.

On the whole, I stuck to the plan. But there are a few interesting deviations; a comic here, a colour drawing there... That's what Inktober is about though, in my opinion; creating daily, experimenting, and seeing what happens.

A time lapse video of me inking Now, episode 29 of Oojo and Bink. This comic strip has more dialogue than I'm used to, so spacing the speech bubbles and linking them together was the challenge this week.

I'm a bit behind with Le Tour de France this year, but since this conversation with Anthony I've been watching previous episodes on theITV Hub and texting my reactions to him for his amusement (and mine).

In this video I talk about an Oojo and Bink comic strip called Sunshine; the decisions I made when changing it from a black and white drawing to a colour one. To see more videos like this, please subscribe to my YouTube channel.

From the initial pencil draft to the final coloured version, this video shows the development of one of my Oojo and Bink comic strips. Unusually, I inked one panel at a time, instead of inking across all four panels and revisiting them several times.

Despite going through an unimaginably difficult time at the moment, my friend Mark was cheery when I saw him, inquisitive about me and my girlfriend, and grateful for the NHS staff who have been treating him. I've got massive respect for the guy.

Last year the New Statesman advertised for a cartoonist to draw satirical cartoons and comics for their magazine. I submitted the comic strip above, inspired by this article reporting that cooking enthusiasts were panicking about the closure of the BBC Food website and the loss of recipes on it.

The joy of inking this comic strip was drawing Bink shivering, because I could draw wobbly lines and get away with it! The testing part was drawing the contents of the fridge without consuming the contents of my own.

This photo reminds me that all I need to make my comic strip, Oojo and Bink, is some Bristol Board, a pencil, a rubber and some pens. Plus a ruler. And a scanner, a laptop and Photoshop software. And a table. Or other flat surface. That's all. ;-)